The plants are growing larger and many have blossoms and small fruits on them. Also growing are pests. This is a picture of a cucumber plant with blossoms and tiny cucumbers. You can also see a white powder on the leaves. We have been inundated with cucumber beetles, which eat not only cucumber plants but also all kinds of squashes and melons. We are fighting them off with natural products and it looks like we are winning the battle as long as we are dilligent.
Here is our first head of broccoli growing. It will be a little while yet before they're big enough to pick.
Eric is pounding stakes in the cucumber rows for trellis for the cucumbers to grow on.
And Elisha is helping pound the stakes. He has to be right in the middle of everything we do. Someone commented to us today that every time they have seen him he is running. And do you remember that I said most of the garden was mud??? Well, he went out to check things out right after it had finished raining for 4 days. He walked down a path and sank knee deep in the mud. While he was trying to pick up his feet, he lost his balance and sat down in the mud. We should have taken a picture of him like that but didn't think about it until later. The caption would have been "This one is almost ready to be picked."
Last night and this morning Lee, Gwen and I spent a few hours picking more suckers off the tomato plants. In case you don't know, suckers are extra branches that grow above the regular branches. They suck nutrients from the plant but don't produce any fruit. If you pick them off, the plant can produce more fruit. I've also talked to people who have been gardening for a very long time who didn't know that you should plant marigolds with your tomatoes. Tomato hornworms hate marigolds, so if you plant them together the icky hornworms stay away. Whenever I haven't planted marigolds, I've always had to pick hornworms off my tomatoes.
We now have some lettuce that's ready to pick if you want any.